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Copyright Oggbashan April 2014
The author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
This is a work of fiction. The events described here are imaginary; the settings and characters are fictitious and are not intended to represent specific places or living persons.
This story is not eligible to win the 2014 Earth Day Story Contest because I am a recent winner of a themed contest.
Votes and comments would still be appreciated.
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I couldn't own and run my company without being sometimes not very nice and occasionally nasty. I try to make the nasty part only an act but managing a business isn't always pleasant.
I first met Eleyna about four years ago. She was taken on as an employee in one of my food factories as a production line worker. On my regular walks round that factory I noticed her. She was impossible to miss. The most obvious sign was her headscarf. She always wore one, in different ways each day, not totally covering her hair but enhancing it.
Eleyna is tall and blonde with a slight build. She isn't beautiful but she has the sort of looks that make a man look twice and then a third time before starting to wonder why he is looking so much at this woman who isn't beautiful.
I had been thinking about Eleyna far more often than is good for an employer. Finally, on one of my visits I stopped beside her workstation and spoke to her. I don't remember what I said first, probably something about how did she like the job. Her reply was in clear educated English. That made me ask the second question.
"Why are you working in this job?"
Eleyna's reply was that it was the only job she could get. That made me think hard. If that was true, and if she was well educated as she sounded, she must be an illegal immigrant. That would mean real trouble for me and for her. I couldn't afford to employ illegals. I had too many employees to be certain that one or two weren't on forged papers but my personnel department checked as best they could.
The immigration department left my company alone because we tried to comply with the law. If they found one or two of our hundreds of employees were illegals then apart from removing them to a detention centre their department wouldn't prosecute us. They could. They didn't if it was just one or two and we could show that we had done our best to prevent illegals getting jobs with us. The system is stupid. If illegals could register to work legally while their applications were processed then they wouldn't be such a strain on our welfare system. Their employers could help sort the genuine willing future citizens from the workshy and criminal.
But now I had a problem. I suspected Eleyna was an illegal. If I wanted to retain my relative immunity from the Immigration Department then I had to do something to make certain about Eleyna's status. I beckoned to Eleyna's forewoman who was standing at the edge of the group of managers around me.
I took the forewoman away from the group.
"Please tell her, what's her name," I pointed discreetly to Eleyna, "to report to the Personnel Department at two o'clock. Ring Personnel, tell them that I have asked her to come and get an interview room ready for me at one forty-five with her personnel file. Understood?"
The forewoman was obviously frightened of me. She was perspiring despite the chill on the factory floor.
"Yes, Mr Andrews. I will tell Eleyna to be at Personnel at two o'clock."
She struggled with her fear of me.
"Is anything wrong, sir? Eleyna is a good worker. I wish we had more like her."
That sounded good for the forewoman. Despite her fear of me, she had stood up for her worker.
"What's your name?" I barked at her.
"Mary Jones, Sir."
That was a prompt and certain response. Mary Jones wasn't afraid of me for herself but for Eleyna.
"Thank you, Mary. I'm not sure whether anything is wrong or not. I'd like to see you too in the Personnel Department. At three o'clock. OK?"
"Yes, Sir."
I dismissed Mrs Jones. I had noticed the wedding ring on her finger. I beckoned to the factory production manager.
"Alan," I said. "I am pulling that girl off the line just before two and her forewoman at three. Make sure the line is covered."
"Yes, Mr Andrews. Will do."
He wanted to ask why. I let him sweat.
When I had finished lunch in the factory canteen, eating the same food in the same conditions as any of the employees, I dismissed my entourage and went to the Personnel Department. They had the small conference room ready for me and Eleyna's personnel file. I read it and found what I didn't really want to find. Her official first name wasn't Eleyna but Cybele, the Earth Goddess. Some of her paperwork was forged. They were good forgeries but I had seen too many, more than the Personnel people at this one factory.
I stood up when Eleyna was shown in. The conference room had double-glazing to half of the walls. The staff in the Personnel Department could see us but not hear what we said. There was a recording facility for audio and video. I hadn't switched it on. I asked Eleyna to sit down. She sat, crossing her wrists in her lap.
"Miss Eleyna," I said. Actually I didn't. I used her surname. I won't record it here. Eleyna has relations back home who might object if their name was shown. It was a complicated surname for an Englishman to pronounce. I got it right first time. I could see that Eleyna was surprised.
"We have a problem." I continued.
"We?" she asked.
"Yes. We. I have a problem because I have looked at the documents in your personnel file. It doesn't help that they refer to you as Cybele, not Eleyna. Why is that?"
Eleyna sighed.
"Yes. My real name, or the name my parents gave me, is Cybele. But that has awkward associations in my country, and even among my community here. Cybele is an Earth Goddess. What that means is that I was dedicated to Cybele, and in my country I would be expected to behave like a priestess of Cybele. I didn't want that."
"Why not, Eleyna?"
She spat out the answer:
"Because Cybele's priestesses are expected to prostitute themselves at her Temple every Earth Day. They must be available to any man who gives a large enough donation to the Temple."
"Why on earth did your parents...?"
"Because we had suffered two years of poor crops on the family farm when I was born. They thought that dedicating me to Cybele would help. What really helped was one of my mother's brothers. He told my father that he was mismanaging the farm. He was. He was a drunk and did the farm work badly. My uncle threatened to beat my father up if he didn't become a good provider. And he would have. It wasn't Cybele's intervention that made the farm productive. It was my uncle's threats."